Ratings show Obama is least popular in India

Barack Obama is least popular in India

Ahead of United States President Barack Obama's visit to India, his approval rating has fallen to its lowest since 2008 in the country where the decisions of his administration to hike visa fee for professionals and outsourcing have grabbed the headlines.

The approval rating of the US leadership has dropped by 13 per cent -- from 31 per cent in 2008 to 18 per cent in 2010, the latest Gallup Poll has aid.

At the same time, the approval rating of the US leadership has shown sign of marked improvement, in the aftermath of the $7.5 billion Kerry-Lugar-Berman bill and massive flood relief work, in Pakistan where the approval rating has almost doubled from 10 per cent in 2008 to 18 per cent in 2010.

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Image: President Barack Obama waits in the Diplomatic Reception Room of the White House, prior to an event commemorating the 20th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act on the South Lawn, July 26Photographs: White House Photo by Pete Souza

Barack Obama is least popular in India

Stepping up his campaign against outsourcing, Obama recently asserted his administration would offer tax benefits only to those firms which will create jobs in the country, a move that may hit Indian IT firms in a big way.

The move, which comes ahead of Obama's visit to India in November, follows a controversial legislation that increased H-1B and L1 visa fees, hitting India's over $50 billion IT industry.

Incidentally, the approval rating of the American leadership in India and Pakistan is one of the lowest in the 18 Asian countries where the Gallup Survey was conducted.

Image: President Obama meets with administration officials during a terrorism threat briefing in the Situation Room of the White HousePhotographs: White House Photo by Pete Souza

Barack Obama is least popular in India

However, while Pakistanis' high disapproval (68 per cent) of US leadership largely explains their low approval number, the high percentage of Indians (72 per cent) who don't have an opinion largely explains theirs.

"Indians who do offer an opinion are more likely to approve than disapprove," Gallup said.

In fact, in many other countries in the region where approval is lowest -- Vietnam, Sri Lanka, Nepal, and Indonesia -- about half or more of respondents do not have an opinion about US leadership, but those who do are more likely to approve than disapprove.

Image: President Barack Obama signs a bill in the Oval OfficePhotographs: White House Photo by Pete Souza